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August 12, 2025 • 33 mins

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Speaker 1 (00:03):
It's that time. Time time, luck and load. The Michael
Arry Show is on the air. Oh man, that hits

(00:25):
me in the right spot.

Speaker 2 (00:26):
Who were you thinking of when we were making up
last night? Was it a good looking stranger out of
your friendfie you didn't want when we was in to
it last night? Who are you thinking when we were

(00:50):
loved last time? Who are you thinking of when I
was making up to you? Some time?

Speaker 1 (01:07):
So there comes a point in time after family dinner
and my time with the family, you know, they start
going to bed. My wife likes to go to bed early.
The kids. Michael's in town for a couple more days
till he starts back to school. Crocket likes to go

(01:29):
and play his games with his buddies online. Michael likes
to listen to music, watch movies. So I go to
this little cottage out back and I fire up my cigar,
and ever so often, ever so often, as a special treat,
I might have it, you know, just to sip, you know,

(01:51):
just a little si. And I will start with going
through the news again and again and again and forwarding
things to Jim m which he will then turn by
this morning and have ready. And so between Chad's prep
and then what Jim has done, and ever so often,

(02:11):
ever so often a monal contribute little something, and then
Kunda's kind of on special projects and he does the
blast on it. So I'll get out there. But there'll
come a point where I know I'm supposed to go
to bed, right and I know I'm supposed to go
to bed. It's the right thing to do, and I
will say to myself, you know, just a little bit naughty.

(02:34):
I'm a stay up. That's what I'm supposed to do
because I can't. Can't. Nobody tell me I can't. That's
my wife comes out and says, come to bed. But
that point, hopefully she's asleep, and I will go off
into the rabbit hole through the looking glass and I
will end up. And last night I ended up on

(02:54):
Freddie Fender, which of course meant I had to go
to Texas tornadoes, which meant I had to go to
Sir Douglas Quartet, which meant I had to come back
around to Flocko Jimenez just dying the other day, and
I didn't even get to Augie Myer's, and it just

(03:15):
hits me in such a good way to go back
to those moments. But I ended up on a clip
of the Texas Tornadoes on David Letterman. But it was
an odd deeal. He would profile, you know, comedian would
come out and do their set, or band would do there.

(03:36):
The night that Stevie Nickson Fleetwood Mac get inducted into
the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, they performed, you know,
he taped in the afternoon for the show that night
they performed on Letterman show. No, it's not that, Yeah,
I know it, Yeah, I know I know that bothers

(03:58):
you And it was it was her and Lindsay Buckingham,
and there's so much history between the two of those
and then he's doing she's doing landslide and goes around
behind Lindsay and just put her hands on both of
his shoulders while he's playing, and it was just amazing. Anyway,

(04:19):
So I ended up on a Letterman clip of Texas
Tornadoes playing there, and he has no clue who they
are and really no interest in learning, but you can
tell he at least appreciates the fact that Paul Shaeffer
is losing his mind. Paul Shaeffer is so excited they

(04:40):
are there, and he's trying to get Dave hyped about
it without making it weird as to what legends they are.
And Dave is just kind of blowing him off because
he's from Indiana and in New York or LA. It
just doesn't care. And it was just interesting to me
because I felt ad for Freddy Fender because at one

(05:01):
point I felt like he was thinking, you know, this
guy's not giving us any respect, and he should. Now.
I understand there is the highwaymen, and I understand you
got the traveling Wheelbery's, but you've got you can't mention
those two without mentioning Texas tornadoes. When you add up

(05:23):
the body of work Sir Douglas Quintet, Fluckle him and
s Augie Myers and then the great Ready Fender, and
think that those two, that those four came together, it's
a pretty amazing thing. I mean, you didn't realize at
the time, but it's a pretty amazing thing that that

(05:46):
it happened. Speaking of pagers, the Associated Press writes ridiculous
puff piece on the Hezbola terrorists, who were the quote
unquote victims of the Israeli page your attack. I gotta
tell you, that's one of my favorite acts of war.
Conducted by a country in a long time. I know

(06:08):
a lot of people don't like the Jews and Israel
and their influence and Epstein and everything else. You can
hate the Jews, you can hate Israel, but you still
have to take a moment and appreciate the ability to
and to just I mean, it's like a prank for
this thing to go. What's eh? You have a parody

(06:32):
on that? I was still gonna talk about. Okay, go ahead.

(07:12):
I mean that's the kind of thing. You're at the
deer least with the boys and they go, I tell
you who, I've had about enough of? Is that? What's
it called? Bobby knows all of it? What's a hesbola?
You know what I like them to do? You know,
those guys always have pagers. I wish they'd put a
bomb in there. And then those fellas, you know, they're
carrying that pager right next to their crotch and at

(07:33):
one moment, you know, push the button and bunah. Yeah.
I bet they'd knock it off after that, wouldn't they.
Can you imagine they're walking around they've been neutered, my goodness,
like a capon strutting around. Ain't got any and then
some of them missing their fingers, some of them missing

(07:54):
a little bit of everything. Yep, yep, he's one waveo
short of a rancho of a of a What is it?
What's the breakfast thing? Salt?

Speaker 3 (08:05):
Uh?

Speaker 1 (08:06):
What is the breakfast dish? It's eggs and red saucer?
What pebos Franco's Yeah, that joke doesn't work as well.
If it has weebos in the title, it would have
been better for them. Let me think through how to
let me think do that. He's one febos short of
a of an omelet no, okay, give me a minute,
give me a minute.

Speaker 2 (08:26):
And you're listening to this season radio Michael Berry.

Speaker 1 (08:33):
If he brings you happy name, then I wish you.

Speaker 4 (08:43):
Hi.

Speaker 3 (08:44):
You're doing this money him? Do you see is Surley
cute liquor girl? It's you on the American's on Lanes. You
know how you go on there and you signs on
and you put your scream name on there, and the
men's gravitate on it and they can see your profile.
Ain't know whether or not you're ignorant, how tall and
how fat and everything it is? Were good the other

(09:08):
night of mens it was Oh they were swarming me.
You would have thought they was giving out free cheese online.
It means which is I am? So you could say,
ding ding ding ding ding ding ding ding?

Speaker 4 (09:20):
You come to me? You come to me?

Speaker 3 (09:22):
Oh no, I didn't want them telling about how you're
doing and where you use that? Now what you want?

Speaker 2 (09:27):
This evening?

Speaker 3 (09:28):
Every thing and good? I was hiding and kind of
lord to middles time. Man. Everything I wrote back on
there was just scrambled it all kind of letters mix up.
I know what I was talking about.

Speaker 4 (09:38):
Good.

Speaker 1 (09:38):
I was some burns down there on.

Speaker 3 (09:41):
The American on LAMB. So I had to finally just
sign off and quit because I cannot be noticed ignorant
on lads, tell your mama.

Speaker 1 (09:51):
Asks how she asked her.

Speaker 3 (09:52):
She's still playing that card game online.

Speaker 1 (09:56):
She didn't lost all of it. Better that fact your life.
I mean, man, where this is?

Speaker 2 (10:06):
I'll love yes by gon divoguandle these this.

Speaker 4 (10:19):
I'll be there.

Speaker 1 (10:22):
Anytime you need me.

Speaker 2 (10:27):
By your side.

Speaker 1 (10:28):
Sometimes I'll call Ramon's mom Mama Martha and seeing that
her in Spanish because she's impressed by my Spanish.

Speaker 3 (10:35):
He's not.

Speaker 1 (10:36):
Now, don't get any satisfaction of of you know, getting
to be told oh, that's really good for a white boy.
I'm very proud of you. That's that's impressive. And then
she and I drive down and she makes door, doesn't
I drink that and some coffee and orchata. You know,
we have a good time. S way things ought to be.

(10:58):
When I started in radio, there was a program director
and there was a big change in the business and
the big the big industry thing was you had to
make the new You had to tailor the news to
the people. And the idea was that people are not
very smart, so you have to give them news and

(11:20):
bite sized pieces that they can digest, that they can
understand that makes them feel good about themselves. So that
was when the financial update was changed too. Your money,
oh my money, Oh honey, he told me about my money.

(11:40):
Your commute, not the traffic anymore. Your my commute. I'm
coming in from Crosby. Is a ferry working today, as
sky Mike, the faerries working today, And so that was
that was the whole thing. So it was a big
push for news stories that were not really news, they

(12:04):
were more advice. And that's when you started getting more
kind of consumer reports and you started getting stories about
you know you really on the TV news. That's that's
where you'd get. You'd try to be watching The Young
and the Restless, and it would pop on an ad
for the evening news tonight and say, is what's in

(12:26):
your fridge gonna kill you? With the clear implication yes,
tonight at six, Hey, honey, what are we doing this evening?
My boss has got this thing we got to be
at at from about five forty five to six thirty sharp.
That's the only time I can't make it. I can't
make it because the TV's acting up and I gotta

(12:48):
find out what in the fridge is gonna kill me
so I can get rid of it. When I got
to talk about serious stuff. That was a lead into
a story. But let me ask you something. Tell me
something you refrigerate that most people don't. Tell me something
you don't refrigerate that many people do, and I'll make
it easy for you. Do you refrigerate your ketchup? Okay?

(13:14):
Do you refrigerate your what's that Irish brand Perry Gold butter?
You do not? That is interesting? I bet you. Hey, hey, hey, hey, hey,
calm down. I don't I'm I'm simply surprised. It's no

(13:36):
judgment zone right here? All right? What about bananas? You
know what my wife does. She puts as she calls it,
aluminium foil on the end of the bananas. I saw
that little hack on one of the on vine or
something years ago. Apparently it works. Okay, put bananas, but

(13:57):
that that's a What about peanut butter? See, I don't
get that. I don't want a couple of things. Oh
you meant to do no? Okay, okay, okay. But you
know another thing about that is it's not just how
long it's going to last, because there's things. Leave it
out and I'll just eat it faster because I don't
want it cold. There's certain things I just don't want cold.

(14:20):
And you can't just microwave stuff that changes the whole
flavor of the process. We bought an Amana microwave circa
nineteen seventy eight when we moved into our little home
in Orange, and that thing was about yay, why so
what is that two feet? How tall? How wide? Is

(14:43):
that two feet two and a half feet and about
eighteen inches tall or more? And to open it, because
it was like chernobyl, to open it you would have
to push down like you remember the old Internet Harvester refrigerators.
You'd walk up and it had this this plate, this

(15:06):
big thick metal plate, that thing. I mean, you knew
that was a refrigerator. And you would grab that plate
and pull it towards you, or on some of them,
you would punch it, which was a good feeling if
you were mad. Remember Tim McGraw in Friday Night Lights
and he drinks the milk straight out of there because
they lost the game and his boy fumbled again, and
you would punch that thing. Well, this was that. But

(15:28):
you would push it down and when you popped it
open this microwave. This wasn't like these little cheap microwaves
now that when you go to close them they don't latch.
And then when you do open them there you know,
you don't even need anither. You just pull it open.
Back in those days, that thing was sealed in there
like at a reactor at Easter Island, and you would
push that thing down and boom it would pop open.

(15:50):
And then you would put things in there. When you
put something in that microwave, by god, it was gonna
cook it for sure. And I remember we get that
was our first microwave to own and my dad built
our little house, and he built the cabinets and he
built this space for that. Back in those days, you'd
have a space for the microwave and you would measure
out the microwave. And it wasn't like today where the Koreans,

(16:11):
you know, build a microwave and you go in there
for twenty dollars and get one, and they go, would
you like a warranty?

Speaker 4 (16:16):
No?

Speaker 1 (16:17):
Throw it away in six months, I'll just come get
another one. Anyway, that microwave stayed there till that was
seventy eight. Man, it wasn't there when my mom died,
but they hadn't replaced it for very long. But anyway,
we'd put tostitos and just cut up some cheese. Anyway
I would like to hear from you, I'll put black

(16:37):
people at the front, because we had heard from black
people in a while and Hispanics in honor of Freddie
Fender on something that you heat or don't heat that
other people, I mean putting refrigerator or don't seven one
three nine nine nine one thousand. What occasioned that bump
is a fellow named tex Valley from info at texomatic

(16:58):
dot com, wherein he writes, things, I refrigerate film. Apparently
it's good to keep it cold so it'll last longer.
Things I don't refrigerate beer. A cool room temperature barley
pop will suffice, but it definitely needs to be in
the cooler if it's stored outside. I've never cared for

(17:20):
room temp beer just never have been. Never has been
a thing that I have anyway. His website is Taxamatic
Motor Media, which is trucker Videos and then the Truck
Photo Agency, and they take photos of trucks, big trucks,

(17:40):
you know, Peter belts in Freightliner. And Margaret writes, Zara,
my father always refrigerated batteries. I don't refrigerate the eggs
my chickens lay, but I will refrigerate store bought eggs
if I have to buy them. My issue with refrigerating
is not so much much based on what allows them

(18:02):
to keep longer. Because we have we're kind of a
just in time delivery system in our home. I mean,
I got two teenage boys. Groceries do not hang around
at our house, so we don't have to worry about
how long things stay the way old people do. Most
things I don't like to refrigerate because I don't like
them cold. And if you just want to eat something

(18:23):
at room temp, I don't want to have to microwave it. Right,
We're gonna take black callers first. We're not going to
do backgrounds. If you say you're black, we'll assume you're black.
We'll just trust you on that, like Rachel Dolosol or
Sean White. But since we haven't had enough Hispanic callers
in a while, Ramon said, everybody can either give us

(18:45):
a Hispanic name or we'll make you one. Okay, so
just go along to get along, that's what we're gonna do.
We're not pandering to minorities. We just we like minorities
and we haven't had enough minority participation in alaw so
we'll start on the black Antonio Europe. That's Anthony Ramon. Yeah, Antonio, you.

Speaker 4 (19:09):
Know when I spoke yes inspired because people do call
it Antonio Antonio Gates.

Speaker 1 (19:16):
Antonio Gates the last player to make the Hall of
Fame and not play college football. You know that?

Speaker 4 (19:24):
And then I think, as Antonio, No, I didn't know that.
Isn't the the guy that trunk this hired his names?
Antonio Antonio something like that for what could be anyway?
What for the guy? But he well he inspired the lady.
Who's over? I think statistics? Oh the officer.

Speaker 1 (19:47):
Of Labor Statistics, Bureau of Labor Statistics, Antonio. What is
your mental?

Speaker 4 (19:56):
No? You were serious? That is my name? My first
name is right?

Speaker 1 (20:00):
And what's your last initial? You don't tell me your name?
You don't want to? Oh so your your your initials
are are AE too.

Speaker 4 (20:11):
That's correct.

Speaker 1 (20:12):
Sometimes I call people, you know, like mc b our
chat is can The problem is I have a friend
named John Eddie Williams and I can't call him by
his name. But I can't, like you know, I'll text
people by their initials, but that'd be weird.

Speaker 4 (20:26):
With him right right right? Well, you know, uh uh
So when I called early and I held the phone
for about forty minutes, I just get right on. But
I just held the phone listen to the conversation. Got
a long drive from us and going into you.

Speaker 1 (20:40):
Are you a driver?

Speaker 4 (20:42):
I'm no. I'm in the A C. Business. I got
my own company and it's called Timely Technicians. We're all
a time.

Speaker 1 (20:50):
You're an independent AC man who's black? I yeah, that's
a U. I'm serious, I'm not. I'm dead seer. I
think to myself, how many of these kids, if we
could get to them and show them that not just
the money, but the pride and the dignity of you

(21:13):
own your own house, you own your own car. You know,
women are gonna wanna not just lay with you, but
be with you for life. Because you're a provider. You
hire people, you get a pat on the back, you
get paid, you get to eat what you want, you
get to sleep at night in peace, and you get
to know. I mean, I can't imagine Ray when you

(21:34):
when you walk away Antonio, sorry, or you can be
Ray Mundo, I can't imagine when you leave. I mean,
think about this, how many how many people come to
your house? If the roofer comes to your house and
he finished as you go, all right, how much is
it gonna be? You know what I mean? But when
when the ac man comes and you're saying, you know,

(21:54):
you're sweating like all get out, and then and then
you leave and you here it is o man, that's
a good feeling. I mean, you get job satisfaction from that, Raymundo.

Speaker 4 (22:07):
Every time. Look when I call I walk into a
person's house. Actually, if I've done the work. Look, I'm
coming and we make friends with a lot of the
people because I want to always stay in touch. Look,
if the wife is happy always, you know, if the
wife is that, everybody's happy. Look my wife. We've been
married almost forty years. And when I'm walking a house,

(22:30):
he knows. Look, Okay, hey you had a good day.
I had a bad day. I really don't have any
bad days. I tell people, Look, I've been so blessed,
and partially I call your show a many o cases,
but I've been so fortunate and blessed.

Speaker 3 (22:42):
Man.

Speaker 4 (22:42):
When I just turned to seventy three, on do a
lot of fourteenth, So that means I haven't retired anyway.
Let me go with this. Hold on ben.

Speaker 1 (22:50):
C, you don't sound seventy three, and you sound forty.
You sound younger than RJ.

Speaker 4 (22:58):
Look at you out of fourteen nineteen fifty two.

Speaker 1 (23:01):
Wow, that's impressive. We'd like to see what you look like,
because if you look as young as you sound, that's impressive.

Speaker 4 (23:11):
If you see me, I'm gonna say it like this,
I'm gargeous, handsome, not overweight, a beautiful skin, beautiful nails.
I know what to look for a nail's feet. Look
when we were going up. I talked to you a
while back about the encyclopedias, but tiny and all that.
Oh yeah, my mom made sure that whatever you had on,
made sure your shoes were clean. We have to shine

(23:32):
our shoes every Saturday night for Sunday church with a
nice clean Your shoes were not shining. You had on
the clean suit. You better make sure those shoes were shining,
because those shoes I shining and it throws your suit off.

Speaker 1 (23:47):
Where did you go to that had to happen every day?

Speaker 4 (23:49):
So my dad, I would I went to church at
I'll tell you this. When we came to Houston, we
went to Saint Nicholas Church, one of the old it's
it's a historical landmark, and.

Speaker 1 (23:59):
Up Louisiana Castel.

Speaker 4 (24:01):
Yeah yeah, yeah, yeah, Louisiana. You already know Saint Nicholas,
Saint Marys. I went to both of those Schotolics schools,
Saint Nicholas, Saint Bars And then of course Mom said,
once you get out of eighth grade, Dad say, once you
get out of eighth grade, you can go to public school.
Went to public school. I was totally lost.

Speaker 1 (24:16):
Where'd you go to public school.

Speaker 4 (24:20):
I went to check this out, you little history. Nineteen
sixty eight, first year of integration Colin Junior High. A
lot of people don't believe it. Colin Junior High was
totally I'm gonna say it, one hundred percent white. Nineteen
sixty integration came in. We started making a change our
farm area, change the whole nine yards. So that's what
was the middle school. And then went to Worth.

Speaker 1 (24:40):
Hold on Antonio pulling rut there and all y'all hold
rut there.

Speaker 3 (24:46):
And so I just put that on the Micael Bearris.

Speaker 1 (24:48):
So Michael Barry Show. If I recall, that's black Oak, Arkansas, right.
And I had heard that in a minute. I did
not expect to hear that today. Thank you for that.
Hold On. I'm gonna go back to Antonio. But I

(25:08):
got a nice message from a fellow named Brian Royo Royo,
not Mike Royko, but Brian Royo. Subject line Fortress Protective Buildings,
wants to donate a building to a cause or organization.
See that's somebody that understands how to structure an email.

(25:29):
Subject tells you what it is. Then he says, zar,
I would like to donate one or two of our
protective buildings to an organization or cause. I have two
to donate, but I don't know who or how to
find the right organization. Well you found it now. They
call a fortress Defender. Our buildings were designed for the

(25:50):
industrial market and are highly protective against explosions, fires, toxics,
and natural disasters. The buildings can be used anywhere where
you need to protect peace, people of high or high
value assets. Any help in finding the right organization or
cause would be greatly appreciated. Thank you for all you do.
Brian Royo Fortress Protective Buildings. So I went on their

(26:13):
site and their company is called Baker Risk, but one
of their divisions is Fortress Defenders, and ramon, this is
the kind of thing we need because it's it's like
a tilt wall, but a lot thicker. It's like a
it's like a tilt wall with three sides on it.
So what we could do is get one. We'll get
when having him donate one to Camp Hope and one

(26:36):
to us. We'll put it on Cody Johnson's ranch and
we'll have Daniel Dean bring some of their heavy equipment
and then we'll say all right, from five feet back,
can I knock it over. Boo, Nope, five feet didn't
do it. Let's do ten feet and just see what it.
I don't think you could. I don't think you could
knock this thing over. I don't think they got stuff
blowing up. Can you imagine going to work every day

(26:57):
where you had to blow stuff up? I mean it's
like a seventh grade science project every day. That's not
a job. That's amazing. If you ever have anything for
Camp Hope that you want to donate like that, email
me and I will afford it. And I that's really awesome.
It's fantastic. Speaking of which, I have a couple of

(27:17):
show sponsor wants. These are show sponsors in areas where
I get a lot of questions and requests for who
our show sponsor is, who handles this, and I don't
have one. One of those is a bank. I would
really really like to have a bank. But hold on
before you respond, because you work at a bank. I'd

(27:40):
like to have a bank that is a Houston based
bank that's not going to sell within the next three months,
because the only reason apparently to start a bank is
to sell the damn thing. Everybody I know starts a bank.
They call on Monday, Hey, Michael, I started a bank,
and on Thursday they've sold and moved to Bahamas. I
don't understand that. I don't understand the banking business, but

(28:00):
it must be good because there's one on every corner.
And yeah, so I do understand a bank bus. I'm
a kidding, but I would like a local bank that
is retail focused, but not a retail bank, you know,
not like a Wells Fargo or one of the you know,
Bank of America. What am I going to say, Hey,

(28:22):
Wells Fargo, they'll take good care of you. Well, maybe
they will, maybe they don't. That's what a San Francisco
based bank. Cadence was a supporter, not just a sponsor,
but a supporter for years and my personal bank, and
they I would, you know, listeners would email in, hey
I need to open an account. Well, the truth is,
banks don't make any money off you if you just

(28:44):
open an account. They want to they want big loans
and things like that. But we had a lot of
business companies, you know, Dane Burson type people that you know,
they might take out a fifty million dollar loan to
buy a property or whatever, and that's what banks want.
They don't. They're happy to take care of Joe Blow

(29:04):
that wants to open a savings account. But that's not
where banks make their money. They make their money on
these small to mid size commercial loans. That's what the
local bank community type banks do. So I need a
show sponsor. Email me if that is you to be
that to fill that category. It costs a lot of money,

(29:25):
but it pays off. Cadence made a fortune off that.
But my guy Paul Murphy, who was the founding president
CEO of the company when he retired, that there were
folks that came in from out of market that didn't
know who we were, and you know, they, like everybody else,
they wanted to repaint. So I was part of what

(29:46):
got painted over. Anyway, I would like to find a
community bank that wants those types of customers, because we
got a lot of listeners that own painting business or
roofing business or Antoni here who has got an ac business,
and those things turn over more cash than you would expect.

(30:06):
Then I have checked. Antonio is the only independently owned
UH air conditioning company by a blackfellow in the state
of Texas. That's correct. I checked, I checked, I asked Chad.
He said, seems about right, Antonio, Yes, sir, where are

(30:28):
you today? What are you working on today?

Speaker 4 (30:32):
I'm in Magnolia, Oh the first time coming out here.
And client had and AC problem. He had a couple
of guys that came out.

Speaker 1 (30:43):
You know, I'm going to get seven calls in the
next minute. I see him. How do you know it's him?
He's the only one you know.

Speaker 4 (30:50):
And you see it on my van. I got to
I got to signs and everything on my vand so
they will, they will see it.

Speaker 1 (30:56):
What's side impact? What does the van say?

Speaker 4 (30:58):
And the number looking if it's timely technicians time? And
he tells all what we do time? The T I
M E L y We always on time technicians?

Speaker 1 (31:10):
Well I have an ac AC. But Robert won't mind
me bragging on you a little. He's got more business
and he's got more than he can say. Grace over
and he will love your story. Timely Technicians.

Speaker 4 (31:23):
I was.

Speaker 1 (31:25):
They don't even sound like an air conditioning company, and.

Speaker 4 (31:29):
It doesn't and it doesn't. That's good. But see, the
time is set the course. We're always own time. So
when people ask me always on time?

Speaker 1 (31:41):
All right, okay, do you install new A c's or
just do repair.

Speaker 4 (31:46):
We know we do all of it. I'm getting better
to uh install a new one now because the guy
has the old free art, which is the R twenty two.

Speaker 1 (31:54):
Don't you doing this? This is me off so bad.

Speaker 4 (32:00):
But we repair. We can repair and save you a
lot of money because what we had, we we work with.
The code we might have changed free on so much
is because people let it off in the air. It
causes the environment to go bad and all that. We
understand all that. But anything that's not H two O
per s they are, whatever is already in the air

(32:22):
is gonna affect the air anyway. So when they change
free on, all of them new the same thing they
just changed as of this year, which is really crazy
for more flammable free on, which I don't agree with,
effect manufactured product and less effected. Yes, sir, you already

(32:45):
know it's less effected. The R twenty two work good. Look,
I kept my units on my house for thirty years.
I had the lineage units R twenty two. I just
changed them out. I'm saying this saying I'm a few
years ago went to the four ten four ten works
just as good. But the URA to go the work
hards back in the day. Yeah, so now we had
to four ten. So now we got the new for y'all,

(33:05):
which I don't like.

Speaker 1 (33:06):
No, you know, Hunting is one of our shows sponsors.
And I went over and visited with them, and this
was before the law went into effect, and they were
moving them out of there like it was going out
of business sale. And I said, what's going on and
they said, everybody is buying their air conditioning right now
while they can still get a system that is efficient
and effective before this crazy, stupid new law comes into effect. Antonio,

(33:30):
I'm glad you called
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